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How Kushagra Tyagi designs homes that evolve with your emotions

Forget fleeting trends—this designer builds spaces shaped by your habits, stresses, and even travel memories. A home should tell your story.

The image shows a house with a roof, steps, railings, grass, dried leaves on the ground, decorative...
The image shows a house with a roof, steps, railings, grass, dried leaves on the ground, decorative items, trees, and a sky with clouds in the background. It is located in Kerala, India, and is a popular destination for travelers looking for things to do in the city.

How Kushagra Tyagi designs homes that evolve with your emotions

Kushagra Tyagi creates homes that go beyond mere aesthetics. Through his studio Purru, he crafts spaces shaped by personal stories and emotions. His approach turns architecture into something deeply individual and evolving.

Tyagi begins each project with long conversations. He asks clients about daily habits, stresses, favourite colours, and even travel memories. These discussions help him uncover what makes a space truly meaningful to them.

His background as a wedding planner sharpened his ability to read emotional cues. He now applies this skill to graphic design, translating feelings into design choices. For him, a house only becomes a home when it starts to hold memories.

The spaces he designs avoid quick visual impact. Instead, they reveal themselves slowly, growing richer as people live in them. His work deliberately blurs the lines between inside and outside, decoration and experience, structure and sentiment.

Tyagi's method focuses on the psychological weight of design. His projects resist fleeting trends, aiming to create environments that deepen over time. The result is architecture that feels both personal and enduring.

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